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Official Alaska Hunting Safety Course Link to Alaska Department of Fish & Game

Hello, hunter! Alaska's online hunting course has moved. Click here to go to the latest version of the Today's Hunter in Alaska course—the official hunting safety course of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

The following course material is for reference only. Please go to the new course to complete your Alaska certification.

Habitat Management

Example of a good moose habitat

The habitat is where a species fulfills its basic life needs: nourishment, procreation, and rest. If not managed properly, urban development can result in habitat loss, which presents the greatest threat to wildlife. Habitat management, the most essential aspect of wildlife management, safeguards the essential elements to meet these needs:

  • Food and water are necessary to all wildlife. Competition for these elements among species makes cover, space, and arrangement top priorities.
  • Cover protects animals from predators and the weather while they feed, breed, roost, nest, and travel. Cover ranges from thick weeds and brush to a few rocks piled together.
  • Space is necessary for adequate food among wildlife, territorial space for mating and nesting, and freedom from stress-related diseases.
  • Arrangement of these elements ideally allows animals to meet these needs in a small area to minimize energy use while fulfilling their basic needs.

Edge effect refers to the consequence of placing two contrasting ecosystems adjacent to one another. Most animals locate where food and cover meet, particularly near water. An example would be a river bottom, which offers many animals all their habitat needs along one corridor.

habitat: Complete environmental requirements of an animal for survival: food, water, cover, space, and arrangement

Balancing Act

Habitats must be in balance in order to support wildlife. Remove a certain population of plants or animals from a community, and the community may not survive. This typically happens when urban development pushes into wildlife areas.

Before urban development
Before Urbanization

After urban development
After Urbanization

Remember

One of the most common causes of habitat loss in the United States is the growth of urban areas.

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White-tailed deer tracks
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Official hunting safety course for Alaska hunters last modified: November 16, 2011
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